nzherald.co.nz

Phillip Duncan: Parched land can expect rain soon, and more sun

5:30 AM Sunday Feb 3, 2013
Eastern New Zealand will stay dry. Photo / Hawkes Bay Today

Eastern New Zealand will stay dry. Photo / Hawkes Bay Today

February is here and we have heavy rain - tough as that is to imagine right now - big heat and lots of sun in the forecast.

There are more chances of rain within the next seven days than in the past three weeks combined as our long-lasting high finally moves off to the east and allows in a rain band from the Tasman Sea.

Rain or showers are possible in western areas tomorrow then another high moves in making Waitangi Day fantastic, although there is a chance of rain or showers in the Far North, which should hose down any protesters.

Next weekend another rain band comes in, this time hitting the West Coast with heavy rain but on the East Coast expect hot winds.

In fact, we're expecting a number of 30-35C days for inland and eastern areas of New Zealand this month, but balanced with refreshing southerly or south-easterly changes that blow ahead of the incoming Tasman highs.

Driest regions will likely be eastern New Zealand with wetter weather falling in the west.

While the rain will help reverse the big dry for some people, most are looking at another hot, mostly dry month ahead - the rain or showers are likely in the first 12 days of February.

Al Gore has finally reacted to mounting criticism of the sale of his failing TV network to Al Jazeera. As I said in my column last week, Gore spent the start of this century labelling big oil as evil, then sold his TV network to the government of Qatar, whose main export is oil, for $500 million.

MSNBC (as far left as Fox News is far right) this week confronted Gore on the hypocrisy of the sale in a TV interview.

"I certainly understand that criticism - I disagree with it," Gore said. He then quickly went on to filibuster by saying how Al Jazaeera has worked hard to become a trusted and reliable news source. That wasn't the question.

He was again asked if it was hypocritical for him to sell his network to Big Oil, after condemning it for more than a decade. Come on Al, second chance, what's your answer? "I get the criticism - I just disagree with it."

Swing and miss - a bit like his presidential bid. Outside of the sun, Al Gore could be the second biggest source of hot air to affect planet Earth.

- Herald on Sunday

AndrewC (New Zealand) | 11:52AM Sunday, 03 Feb 2013
You'll get a few complaints yourself about the rain in the far north comment!
Al Gore is just like most other people when it comes to climate change/ recyling etc. They're on the bandwagon until it doesn't suit them. We're all greenies until a bit of effort is required.
The Atheist (New Zealand) | 11:52AM Sunday, 03 Feb 2013
Like or hate Al Gore, I'm sure he's bothered by someone on the other side of the world, whose greatest achievement is writing a weather blog, calling him a source of hot air.

Al Jazeera has repeatedly and recently shown that it is the leading, genuinely independent news source on the planet.

Conflating the two issues of journalism and Greenmunism may suit you, but it is false. Your comments smack more of sour grapes than common sense.
Dennis (New Zealand) | 11:52AM Sunday, 03 Feb 2013
The moral outrage over Al Gore selling his network to Al Jazeera seems overblown. Al Jazeera is financed by oil money, but the network has done an outstanding job of providing balance to the slanted coverage of events by Western news media who are all too eager to please their governments. Any news organization that is explicitly targeted by the U.S. in invading Iraq, and by the Israelis in savaging Gaza, has to be doing something right. If he was selling the network to an oil company that was going to turn it into a propaganda arm that would be a different story.

And just for the record, Al Gore's presidential bid was not a "swing and miss". The election was stolen, first by Florida governor Jeb Bush (George W. Bush's brother) conspiring with other Republicans in state government to remove tens of thousands of black voters from the voting lists and secondly by the Republican appointees to the U.S. Supreme court overriding the state legal process and ordering the election to be given to George W. Bush. The stealing of the election was one of the most shameful episodes in U.S. history, and let directly to 9-11 through the incompetence of the Bush team.
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